This article is about an infantry regiment in the Pakistan Army. For the regiment of the same name in the Indian Army, see Punjab Regiment (India). For other uses, see Punjab Regiment.
It is the oldest regiment in the Pakistan Army, tracing its lineage to as far back as 1751, during the reign of the Mughal Empire.[2] The regiment's battalions have a distinguished record of military service, spanning the rise and decline of British colonial rule in South Asia, both World War I and World War II, as well as post-independence Pakistan.
Early history
The Punjab Regiment of Pakistan traces its origins back to the Madras Army of the British East India Company. The senior-most battalion of the 1st Punjab Regiment (which existed separately before 1956) was raised in 1759 as the 3rd Battalion of Coast Sepoys, and became the oldest-surviving infantry battalion of the erstwhile British Indian Army. Their first major engagement saw a decisive victory at the Battle of Wandiwash in 1760, when the British East India Company, led by Sir Eyre Coote, effectively ended French colonial ambitions in South Asia. All of the regiment's battalions subsequently played an important role in the early military campaigns of the East India Company and were actively engaged in the wars against the French, the Kingdom of Mysore and the Maratha Empire.[3]
The numbers and titles of the battalions changed during the successive reorganizations of the MadrasPresidency Army, the British Indian Army and the Indian Army during the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. The names changed from Coast Sepoys to Carnatic Infantry, Madras Native Infantry, Punjabis and finally to the Punjab Regiment. After the Indian Rebellion of 1857, the new colonial administration applied the martial races concept, following which north Indian soldiers overwhelmingly supplanted the south Indians. The regiment was eventually renamed to the Punjab Regiment.
Between 1903 and 1922, the British Indian Army included 28 numbered Punjabi Regiments. In 1922, these were amalgamated into six numbered regiments, namely:
In 1947, the British Raj announced the independence of British India, which would be split into two separate countries: a Hindu-majority India and a Muslim-majority Pakistan. Likewise, the British Indian Army was also to be divided between the two states. Out of the six existing Punjab Regiments, the 1st Punjab, 8th, 14th, 15th and 16th were allotted to the newly raised Pakistan Army, while the 2nd went to the Indian Army.
The Punjab Regiment of the Pakistan Army was raised in its present form in 1956, when four of the five Punjab Regiments allocated to Pakistan were merged into a unified unit.
Punjab Regiments allocated to Pakistan in 1947 (now part of the Pakistan Army Punjab Regiment)
The 1st Punjab's regimental centre was located in the city of Jhelum. In early September 1947, Pakistani personnel arrived from the 2nd Punjab's regimental centre in Meerut (present-day Uttar Pradesh, India) and Indian personnel were dispatched to either the 11th Sikhs or the 6th Rajputanas regimental centres depending on whether they were Sikhs or Hindu Rajputs.
The Punjab Regiment at its height totalled 58 battalions; however, 11 were transferred in 1980 to the Pakistan Army's newly raised Sind Regiment.
The Punjab Regiment has lost the following numbers of soldiers:
1948 War - 130
1965 War - 408
1971 War - 1,292
Operation Al Mizan - 613
Internal/ External Security Duties - 677
Recipients of the Nishan-e-Haider
The Nishan-e-Haider is the highest gallantry award awarded by Pakistan to those who show an incredible amount of valour and courage on the battlefield in the face of staunch adversity. To date, only ten soldiers have been awarded this honour, of which five belonged to the Punjab Regiment:
As a form of respect, deceased recipients are given the honorary title of Shaheed (Arabic: شهيد; šahīd), which denotes martyrdom, whilst living recipients are dubbed Ghazi (Arabic: غازي; ġāzī), the Islamic term for warrior.
Brig. Syed Haider Abbas Rizvi (Ret.) (1984). Veteran campaigners: a history of the Punjab Regiment, 1759–1981 (Pakistan Army). Lahore: Wajidalis. A comprehensive and detailed history of the Punjab Regiment.